do pay attention murky, and try doing a little research, and follow
the discussions on this board.
fact:  it was McCain and the reublicans who 5 yrs ago were sounding
the alarm that fannie and freedie were out of control and needed
regulated
fact: it was the dems who were receiving hundreds of thousands from
these companies to turn a blind eye.
fact: if the dems had put aside their greed, we would not have this
economic meltdown today.
look it up murkey.

On Oct 28, 6:35 am, "moveon.org mike532" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> what in the world are you talking about ?
>
> On Oct 28, 6:31 am, mark <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > if the dems would have listened to McCain and the republicans, instead
>ention  > of collecting all those bribes, the mortgage industry would not be in
> > a meltdown.  always trying to rewrite history, aren't ya murky.
>
> > On Oct 28, 6:27 am, "moveon.org mike532" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > wrote:
>
> > > If the GOP Had Listened to ACORN's Advice, the Mortgage Industry
> > > Wouldn't Be in Meltdownhttp://www.alternet.org/election08/104726/
> > > Desperate Republicans are scapegoating the respected community
> > > advocacy group for Wall Street's disastrous lending
> > > spree.
> > > An increasingly desperate Republican attack machine has recently
> > > identified the community organizing group ACORN as Public Enemy
> > > Number
> > > One. Among ACORN's alleged crimes, perhaps the most serious is that
> > > it
> > > caused, nearly single-handedly, the world's financial crisis. That's
> > > the fantasy. In the reality-based world, it was ACORN that sounded
> > > the
> > > alarm about the exploitative lending practices that led to the
> > > current
> > > mortgage meltdown and financial crisis.
>
> > > Since the 1970s ACORN, which has 400,000 low- and moderate-income
> > > "member families" in more than 100 cities in forty states, has been
> > > warning Congress to protect borrowers from the banking industry's
> > > irresponsible, risky and predatory practices -- subprime loans,
> > > racial
> > > discrimination (called "redlining") and rip-off fees. ACORN has
> > > persistently called for stronger regulations on banks, private
> > > mortgage companies, mortgage brokers and rating agencies. For years,
> > > ACORN has alerted public officials that the industry was hoodwinking
> > > many families into taking out risky loans they couldn't afford and
> > > whose fine print they couldn't understand.
>
> > > Now John McCain and his fellow conservatives are accusing ACORN of
> > > strong-arming Congress and big Wall Street banks into making subprime
> > > loans to poor families who couldn't afford them, thus causing the
> > > economic disaster. McCain's campaign is running a one-and-a-half-
> > > minute video that claims Barack Obama once worked for ACORN, repeats
> > > the accusation that ACORN is responsible for widespread voter
> > > registration fraud and accuses ACORN of "bullying banks, intimidation
> > > tactics, and disruption of business." The ad claims that ACORN
> > > "forced
> > > banks to issue risky home loans -- the same types of loans that
> > > caused
> > > the financial crisis we're in today."
>
> > > For months, the right-wing echo chamber -- bloggers, columnists,
> > > editorial writers and TV and radio talk-show hosts -- has pitched in
> > > with a well-orchestrated campaign to blame the mortgage crisis on
> > > ACORN and the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA), the 1977 anti-
> > > redlining law. In a September 27 editorial, the Wall Street Journal
> > > wrote that "ACORN has promoted laws like the Community Reinvestment
> > > Act, which laid the foundation for the house of cards built out of
> > > subprime loans" and then falsely claimed the bailout bill would
> > > create
> > > a trust fund "pipeline" to fill ACORN's coffers. On October 14 the
> > > Journal's lead editorial, Obama and ACORN, described ACORN as a
> > > "shady
> > > outfit" and accused the group of being "a major contributor to the
> > > subprime meltdown by pushing lenders to make home loans on easy
> > > terms,
> > > conducting 'strikes' against banks so they'd lower credit standards."
>
> > > Discussing the mortgage crisis on his Fox News show, Your World, Neil
> > > Cavuto commented, "Loaning to minorities and risky folks is a
> > > disaster."
>
> > > Over at the Washington Post, columnist Charles Krauthammer complained
> > > that the CRA had led banks and other lenders "to extend mortgages to
> > > people who were borrowing over their heads." Holding forth on The
> > > O'Reilly Factor, Laura Ingraham laid the foreclosure problem on Bill
> > > Clinton, who "pushed all these institutions to lend to minority
> > > communities." Many of the loans, she said, were "very risky." Former
> > > Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee, a putative populist, echoed on the
> > > Hannity & Colmes Show: "The truth is that Democrats controlled the
> > > ability to fix this [the mortgage crisis]. It was their harsh
> > > regulation under the Community Reinvestment Act that started this
> > > ball
> > > rolling down the hill. "
>
> > > On September 10 on Fox & Friends, National Review columnist Stanley
> > > Kurtz described ACORN as "a group of community organizers [who]
> > > specialize in putting pressure, really kind of intimidation tactics,
> > > on banks, to get these banks to make high-risk loans to low-credit
> > > customers. They even show up at the homes of bank officials to scare
> > > them and their families. They send demonstrators into the lobbies of
> > > banks, all to get the banks to make these high-risk loans to people
> > > with low credit." McCain's anti-ACORN attack video is almost a word-
> > > for-word duplication of Kurtz's comments.
>
> > > The right-wing case against the CRA is entirely bogus -- a
> > > diversionary tactic to take the heat off the financial services
> > > industry and its allies, like McCain. The CRA applies only to
> > > depository institutions, like commercial and savings banks, but
> > > thanks
> > > to Congress's deregulation mania, there are now many other lenders,
> > > including private mortgage companies like CitiMortgage, Household
> > > Finance and Countrywide Financial (which was recently bought out by
> > > Bank of America). These outfits, which exist in a shadow world
> > > without
> > > government oversight, account for most of the predatory loans in
> > > trouble today.
>
> > > When Congress enacted the CRA in 1977, the vast majority of all
> > > mortgage loans were made by lenders regulated by the law. In 2006
> > > only
> > > about 43 percent of home loans were made by companies subject to the
> > > CRA. Indeed, the main culprits in the subprime scandal -- the nonbank
> > > mortgage companies, which successfully grabbed the bulk of the
> > > mortgage market away from the CRA-regulated banking industry -- were
> > > not covered by the CRA.
>
> > > 123Next page ยป- Hide quoted text -
>
> > - Show quoted text -
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